0009
Document Title | 1. Service Representation in China; 2. Disclosure of Information on Size of German Forces for N.A.T.O.; 3. Disclosure of Classified P/W Intelligence Information Through Lectures on Escape and Evasion; 4. Indications Against War with the Soviet Union; 5. Review of the Situation Round the Soviet and Satellite Perimeter; 6. Security Service Report on South African Security; 7. Vulnerability Studies; 8. Invasion of the United Kingdom - 1951; 9. Creation of a Joint Logistical Intelligence Staff |
Reference | CAB 159/9 |
Document Date | 8 February 1951 |
Conflicts | Cold War |
Themes | Intelligence Gathering and Surveillance, Military Intelligence and Operations, Intelligence Organisation and Administration |
Regions | Africa, East Asia, Europe, North America |
Countries | China, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Korea, South Africa, Soviet Union, United Kingdom, United States of America |
Document Type | Meeting Minutes |
Organisations | Chiefs of Staff, Foreign Office, Joint Intelligence Bureau, Joint Intelligence Staff, Joint Planning Staff, Ministry of Defence, Security Service, United Nations, Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee |
People | John Gardiner, Stewart Menzies, Patrick Reilly, Percy Sillitoe |
Keywords
attachés, consular intelligence sources, diplomatic officials, military strength, allies, alliances, treaties, manpower, German army, leakage of information, secrecy, military intelligence, classified documents, release of information, staff colleges, escape, evasion, prisoners of war, training, security, security clearance, mobilisation, threat of war with the USSR, war preparations, predicting enemy intentions, assessing enemy strength, contingency planning, Iron Curtain, Eastern Bloc, geographic intelligence, propaganda, troop movements, Soviet satellite states, travel restrictions, transportation, Chinese foreign policy, communism, ideology, Chinese army, intelligence reports, former colonies, police, political dissent, subversion, intelligence services responsibilities, military objectives, British intelligence organisation, intelligence requirements, invasion threat, defence, linguists, recruitment, interpretation, intelligence gathering, intelligence channels